| Literature DB >> 26415603 |
E Walter Helbling1,2, Anastazia T Banaszak3, Virginia E Villafañe1,2.
Abstract
Cyanobacteria are an important component of aquatic ecosystems, with a proliferation of massive cyanobacterial blooms predicted worldwide under increasing warming conditions. In addition to temperature, other global change related variables, such as water column stratification, increases in dissolved organic matter (DOM) discharge into freshwater systems and greater wind stress (i.e., more opaque and mixed upper water column/epilimnion) might also affect the responses of cyanobacteria. However, the combined effects of these variables on cyanobacterial photosynthesis remain virtually unknown. Here we present evidence that this combination of global-change conditions results in a feed-back mechanism by which, fluctuations in solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR, 280-400 nm) due to vertical mixing within the epilimnion act synergistically with increased DOM to impair cyanobacterial photosynthesis as the water column progressively darkens. The main consequence of such a feed-back response is that these organisms will not develop large blooms in areas of latitudes higher than 30°, in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, where DOM inputs and surface wind stress are increasing.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26415603 PMCID: PMC4586519 DOI: 10.1038/srep14514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Impact of solar UVR on photosynthetic carbon assimilation (%) weighted by UV irradiance and depth of mixing for five cyanobacterial species and natural phytoplankton communities from five lakes as a function of water column transparency.
The effect is expressed as the difference in the UVR inhibition of the samples under fluctuating radiation when moving within the epilimnion and the integrated UVR inhibition in the epilimnion calculated from static samples under three fixed irradiances. The penetration of solar radiation into the water column is expressed as the attenuation coefficient for PAR (kPAR, m−1). (a) Nostocales: Nostoc commune (), Anabaena sp. (). (b) Oscillatoriales: Arthrospira platensis (), Phormidium sp. (), and Oscillatoria sp. (). Each symbol represents one independent experiment (mean ± standard deviation; n = 3). The shaded areas in color represent the 95% confidence limits for the regression lines. The gray areas (i.e., effects < 0) indicate lower photosynthetic inhibition in samples incubated under fluctuating irradiance as compared to samples under constant irradiance. In both panels the responses of natural phytoplankton communities were added for comparison with those of cyanobacteria. In the figure, the data from the five different lakes are identified (), in addition to the slope and 95% confidence limits. LC, Lake La Caldera, dominated by Chrysophyceae; LY, Lake Las Yeguas, dominated by Bacillariophyceae; LCon, Lake La Conceja, dominated by Bacillariophyceae; LE, Lake Enol, dominated by Chlorophyceae; and LP, Lake Pipino, dominated by Chlorophyceae. For simplicity these labels are only shown in panel (a).
Figure 2Conceptual model of (a) a turbulent scenario (deep mixing), (b) Predicted scenario of static conditions (no mixing) or (c) fast mixing within a shallow epilimnion under projected global change conditions. In (a) and (c) there are reduced chances of a bloom event because in (a) wind prevents the development of a thermocline whereas in (c) the synergism between faster circulation, a turbid water column and fluctuating solar UVR, inhibits cyanobacterial photosynthesis and growth. Under an intermediate scenario (b) cyanobacterial blooms are expected to be more common in low or no mixed water conditions with a distinct thermocline. The photograph was taken by EWH and the figure was drawn by EWH.